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No evidence of inbreeding avoidance or inbreeding depression in a social carnivore
Authors:Keane, Brian   Creel, Scott R.   Waser, Peter M.
Affiliation:aDepartment of Biological Sciences, University of Cincinnati, Rieveschl Hall Cincinnati, OH 45221, USA bRockefeller University Field Research Center Millbrook, NY 12545, USA cDepartment of Biological Sciences, Purdue University West Lafayette, IN 47907, USA
Abstract:Dispersal by young mammals away from their natal site is generallythought to reduce inbreeding, with its attendant negative fitnessconsequences. Genetic data from the dwarf mongoose, a pack-livingcarnivore common in African savannas, indicate that there areexceptions to this generalization. In dwarf mongoose populationsin the Serengeti National Park, Tanzania, breeding pairs arecommonly related, and close inbreeding has no measurable effecton offspring production or adult survival. Inbreeding occursbecause average relatedness among potential mates within a packis high, because mating patterns within the pack are randomwith respect to the relatedness of mates, and because dispersaldoes little to decrease the relatedness among mates. Young femalesare more likely to leave a pack when the dominant male is aclose relative but are relatively infrequent dispersers. Youngmales emigrate at random with respect to the relatedness ofthe dominant female and tend to disperse to packs that containgenetically similar individuals.[Behav Ecol 7: 480–489(1996)]
Keywords:carnivores   dispersal   dwarf mongoose   inbreeding avoidance   inbreeding depression   mate choice.
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